Re: ***Official 1st Annual HTF January Winter Crime Challenge***
Glad to see the participation in this challenge so far.
And now, finally, my first two reviews. First viewing in
red.
1.
The Violent Years (1956) (MST3K version). Yes, this is the infamous Ed Wood scripted (but William Morgan directed) juvenile delinquency film. Former Playboy Playmate Jean Moorhead stars as Paula Parkins, the neglected daughter of a newspaper publisher and a socialite. She becomes the leader of a tight-sweatered girl gang that has committed a series of stick-up jobs. The most notorious moment comes early in the film, when the girls comes across a couple making out. After robbing the couple, the gang ties up the girl, and take the guy out into the woods and gang rapes him, which must be a first in film history. (You have to love the MST3K response to this scene – “Dr. Forrester has sent us a
truly great movie!”) The gang’s downfall begins when their fence hires them to vandalize the local high school (for some implied Communist agents), leading to a high school shootout and an auto accident. Paula, the sole survivor (and now pregnant), is captured, given a life sentence and dies in childbirth (her cynical last words: “So what?”). The movie ends with a long winded judge giving a couple of moralistic lectures advocating religion and “the old-fashioned woodshed” as the cures for juvenile delinquency. The film is competently but indifferently directed and the acting crosses the line between hard-boiled and wooden. As you can see that it’s perfect ’Bot fodder, and it’s one of my all time favorite MST3K episodes. Its release on DVD can’t happen soon enough.
2.
Behind That Curtain (1929). When is a Charlie Chan film not a Charlie Chan film? When the script writer inverts the story, turning it from a murder mystery into a romantic melodrama, and relegates Charlie Chan to a cameo role in his own story. (In fact, Chan appears in one scene 75 minutes into a 90 minute film.) That’s not to say that this is a bad film. Once you realize what it is, and make allowances for the movie being from the “dawn of sound,” it is still enjoyable, if slow and talky.
The story deals with the murder of extortioner Hilary Galt, which is filmed very atmospherically. The film then focuses on the love triangle among Eve Mannering, her ne’er-do-well husband Eric Durand, and her true love, the explorer Col. John Beetham, with the investigation by Sir Frederick Bruce taking a backseat. The story spans the globe, moving from London to India, then Persia and finally ending in San Francisco. The most effective scene in the film occurs while in India, when Eve Durand returned to her bedroom from the post office to discover evidence that her husband, Eric, is sleeping with their maid, Nuna, and then opens a letter and learns that Eric is being blackmailed because of the murder. What makes it effective is its ingenious use of sound. It is played wordlessly, but accompanied by the sinuous, repetitive singing of Nuna, who is in the next room fanning Eric.
As a mystery,
Behind That Curtain is not that mysterious; it is obvious from the beginning who the murderer is. However if you have a taste for exotic romance in the vein of
The Garden of Allah, you will find this worthwhile viewing. 20th Century Fox should be lauded for releasing such an obscurity.
Also, keep an eye out for Boris Karloff in a minor role as Beetham’s Indian servant.
My tally.